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    M Anderson

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    M. Anderson sits behind the wheel of farming machinery.Photograp

    James M. Anderson

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    An obituary for harness maker and newspaper publisher James M. Anderson

    James M. Anderson

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    An obituary for harness maker and newspaper publisher James M. Anderson

    James M. Anderson

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    An obituary for harness maker and newspaper publisher James M. Anderson

    Elder J. M. Anderson

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    First J. M. Anderson was the first missionary to China, 194147.356 K

    E. M. Anderson Jr.

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    E. M. Anderson Jr., Medina, National President of the Flying Farmers. A man in a room standing and laughing in this photo.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/14310/thumbnail.jp

    W. M. Anderson, superintendent for Arundel Corporation

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    This photograph is of W. M. Anderson, superintendent for Arundel Corporation, the construction firm that built the "Skyway"

    W. M. Anderson, superintendent for Arundel Corporation

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    This photograph, by R. T. Jackson, is of W. M. Anderson at Newfound Gap. Anderson was superintendent for Arundel Corporation, the construction firm that built the Skyway

    Pioneer interviews, Stena M. Anderson

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    Typescript of answers by Stena M. (Anderson) Allred of Ephraim, Utah, for a questionnaire filled out for Utah Works Progress Administration\u27s "Pioneer personal history" survey. She was born in Denmark in 1849, and she came to Utah in 1881 and settled with her family at Moroni, Sanpete Count

    Arthur M. Anderson (264207)

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    The “Arthur M. Anderson” was built in 1952 by the American Ship Building Co. of Lorain, Ohio. The Pittsburg Steamship Co. of Cleveland, Ohio, first owned the ship but sold her to the United States Steel Co. of Cleveland later in 1952. In 1975, the vessel was lengthened at Fraser Shipyard in Superior, Wisconsin. They owned the vessel until 1981. One year later, she was sold to USS Great Lakes Fleet, Inc. of Duluth, Minnesota and was converted to a self-unloader at the Fraser Shipyard
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